The Diagnostics of Clinical Remediation: Teaching Dental ...€¦ · •Experience is the Best...

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The Diagnostics of Clinical

Remediation: Teaching Dental Hygiene

Clinical Instructors How to Teach

88th ADEA Annual Session

San Diego, California

March 16, 2011

Carolyn Ray, RDH, M.Ed. Professor

Department of Dental Hygiene

University of Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Jane Gray, CDA, RDH, M.Ed. Associate Professor

Senior Clinic Coordinator

Department of Dental Hygiene

University of Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Lizabeth Spoonts, RDH, M.S. Associate Clinical Professor

1st Year Clinic Coordinator

Dental Hygiene Program

Texas Woman’s University

Denton, Texas

Course Objectives

• At the end of this course, you will be able to:

• Identify instrumentation techniques that prevent students from achieving positive outcomes.

• Formulate individualized clinical instruction unique to each students’ needs.

• Communicate clinical instruction customized to achieve student competence.

Agenda

8:30 – 8:40 Faculty and course introductions

8:40 – 10:00 Didactic Content Historical Perspectives Ray Novice Students Spoonts Advanced Students Gray

10:00 – 10:10 Break

10:10 – 11:30 Interactive Activities

Historical Perspectives Where did the rules come from?

Instrumentation Textbooks

• 1916, 1921, 1927, 1934

• Mouth Hygiene • Alfred Fones

• 1959, 1963, 1968, 1972

• Clinical Dental Hygiene • Shailer Peterson

• 1973, 1979, 1992, soon to come?

• Periodontal Instrumentation • Anna Matsuishi Pattison

• Gordon L. Pattison

• 2004, 2005

• Essentials of Dental Hygiene: Pre-clinical Skills; and Clinical Skills • Mary Danusis Cooper

• Lauri Wiechmann

• 1983, 1988, 1996 , 2000, 2004, 2008

• Fundamentals of Periodontal Instrumentation • Jill Nield, Ginger O’Conner

• Jill S. Nield-Gehrig

• 2002, 2010

• Experience is the Best Teacher: Manual of Dental Hygiene • Antonella Tani Botticelli

Dr. Alfred Fones December 17, 1869 – March 13, 1938

Dentist and Social Reformer

Founder of the Fones School of Dental Hygiene

University of Bridgeport

(1st Dental Hygiene Program in the World)

1st Dental Hygiene Textbook

• Published in 1916

• Chapter XII – Dental Prophylaxis • Pages 288 – 367

• Topics include, but not limited to:

• The Principles of Dental Prophylaxis

• Practical Work

• Instrumentation (pgs. 313 – 326)

• Polishing (porte polisher) (pgs. 326 – 339) • “Those who would advocate the dental engine are

those who have failed to make themselves proficient with the hand polishers.” (pg. 327)

• Brushing

• Floss Silk

• Some office facts and statistics (practice management)

1983 - present

Evidence-based Decision Making

“….it is important for practitioners to make decisions that are firmly grounded in knowledge that is obtained from research…”

National Dental Hygiene Research Agenda

Evidence-based education

”The integration of professional wisdom with

the best available empirical evidence in making decisions about how to deliver instruction”

www2.ed.gov/nclb/methods/whatworks/eb/edlite-slide003.

(empirical: ”originating in or based on observation or experience”

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/

Textbook based on Experience

Experts Vary

• Upper right quadrant – buccal

• Upper right quadrant - lingual

Principles of Instrumentation

• Where to sit? • 8 – 12 o’clock

• Where to fulcrum?

• Intra-oral • Extra-oral • Same arch • Opposite arch

• What to see? • Indirect vision • Direct vision

Does one size way fit all?

Questions to consider….. • Is the book always right?

• Who is the “expert” at your school?

• Who has the “final say” on what students are taught?

• Is there a “right or wrong” way to teach instrumentation ?

• Are adjunct faculty “equal” in instruction?

• Are clinic coordinators the “boss of you?”

• How are instrumentation instructions calibrated among clinical faculty?

• Is instrumentation different from junior to senior year?

• Can seniors adapt to alternative instruction after practicing junior techniques?

Formative Assessment

The Language of Learning

1975

1975

Exploring and Rolling

Turning the corner

Begin turning prior to approaching the corner

Begin rolling prior to approaching the corner

Generally Accepted Practices

Flexed Thumb

Collapsed Thumb

Flexed Thumb

Collapsed Thumb

LLL Cross Over Occlusal

LLL Handle Up

LLL Crossover Intraoral

LLL Mirror & Light Intraoral

LLL Fulcrum

LRL Crossover

LRL Handle Up

URF Intraoral Fulcrum

URF Extraoral Posterior

URL Intraoral Posterior

URL Extraoral Posterior

Activity 1

Activity 2

Activity 3

Activity 4

Activity 5